Verb
ascribe blame or guilt for something to (someone)
Source: WordNetHollywood is all made up, anyway. Especially the stories and angles that people want to pin on you. Nick Nolte
Most pilots learn, when they pin on their wings and go out and get in a fighter, especially, that one thing you don't do, you don't believe anything anybody tells you about an airplane. Chuck Yeager
Man is not an image engraved on a silver dollar, with covetous eyes, licking lips and a diamond pin on a silver dickey. Man is a living duty, a depository of powers that he must not leave in a brute state. Man is a wing. José Martí
pin the blame on the innocent man Source: Internet
Alastair Clarkson has pulled the pin on his planned involvement in Friday night's state-of-origin bushfire relief match, opting instead to coach Hawthorn in their emergency services-themed practice match against St Kilda in Morwell. Source: Internet
“Another park-goer, who had a rainbow pride pin on their bag, was called a homophobic slur. Source: Internet